Casa Belvedere Sponsors Historical Novel about Sicily

Foundation Continues Exploration of Italian National Identity through Literary Project

     (Grimes Hill, Staten Island, NY)   All roads lead to Sicily via Staten Island. The Italian Cultural Foundation at Casa Belvedere is sponsoring an online fund raising campaign to support Trinàcria: A Tale of Bourbon Sicily. Written by Anthony Di Renzo, this historical novel—like Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa’s The Leopard—chronicles the destruction of the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies during the Italian Revolution.

Palermo Pretoria Square

     “We absolutely embrace this initiative,” said Louis Calvelli, Casa Belvedere’s executive director. “While the proof of Italy’s rich heritage is aplenty, Casa Belvedere is actively working on building upon the Italian cultural landscape by formally sponsoring an arts project. Once the restoration of the mansion is complete, we look forward to providing a venue for Italian and Italian American artists to showcase their work.”

     Di Renzo’s novel reflects Casa Belvedere’s institutional mission. Last year, the foundation capped its commemoration of the 150th anniversary of the Risorgimento with a public debate on Italian Unification. Moderated by Cavaliere Vincenzo Marra, this lively exchange between Pino Aprile, author of Terroni (Piemme 2010), and Lorenzo del Boca, author of Polentoni (Piemme 2011) touched upon the often painful historical and political issues discussed in Trinàcria.

     Did unification benefit or ruin the Mezzogiorno, the ancestral region of most Italian immigrants? Guernica Editions, an independent press in Toronto, Ontario, believes Di Renzo’s novel “could contribute significantly” to the ongoing review of this fundamental question on both sides of the Atlantic. Dedicated to promoting new works of global literature and shattering stereotypes, Guernica considers Trinàcria “a timely book.”

     Because Guernica’s government funding does not extend to non-Canadian authors, Di Renzo and consultant Roberto Ragone considered several organizations. “Casa Belvedere emerged as our sponsor because of its mission,” Ragone explained: “to preserve and promote an appreciation of Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine, and commerce.’ It was a perfect fit.”

     The book’s author called the partnership “a stroke of fate, la forza del destino.” “I am grateful for Casa Belvedere’s support and hope my novel will contribute to its success,” said Di Renzo, associate professor of writing and Italian American history at Ithaca College. “By uncovering buried stories about our collective past, the foundation is positioning itself to play a unique role among Italian American organizations.”

     Di Renzo’s novel also digs up the past. Its title derives from the ancient Greek name for Sicily.   Trinàcria refers to the island’s triangular shape and the three-legged gorgon on its regional flag.  It is also the nickname of the novel’s narrator and protagonist, Zita Valanguerra Spinelli (1794-1882), Marchesa of Scalea, whose turbulent life mirrors Sicily’s rocky transition from feudalism to capitalism.

     The story begins when a Hollywood film crew invades Palermo to shoot an epic about the Italian Revolution. Researching the past, the director visits the city’s Capuchin catacombs. Preserved in the catacombs among over eight thousand mummies is Marchesa Spinelli. Dead for eighty years, she remains haunted with memories, and her spirit recalls her complicated relationships with her scientist father; a British wine merchant, whom the Marchesa failed to marry; her patriotic and rebellious granddaughter; and Giacomo Leopardi, the doomed Romantic poet.

     Organized by Roberto Ragone, whose professional motto is “Transforming Vision to Value,” Trinàcria’s online fundraising campaign intends to raise the necessary funds to cover the book’s editing, design, printing, promotion, and distribution. Based on their giving level, the site bestows donors with an aristocratic rank from the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies (e.g. Baron/Baroness, Count/Countess, Prince/Princess, King/Queen). Each title offers its own gifts and privileges, from bookmarks, calendars, and posters to formal acknowledgment in the printed novel and an invitation to its official book launch.

     This book campaign will run until December 13, 2012. All future royalties will benefit the Italian Cultural Foundation at Casa Belverede. For more details, visithttp://www.indiegogo.com/trinacria?c=home

 For further information, please contact Roberto Ragone at:

 

 

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Campaign Partners

The Italian Cultural Foundation of Casa Belvedere seeks to preserve, promote and celebrate the rich heritage of Italy by encouraging an appreciation of the Italian language, arts, literature, history, fashion, cuisine and commerce through educational programs, exhibits and events. It carries out its mission through educational programs for all age levels.  The Foundation highlights the many positive contributions of Italians and Italian-Americans in the United States, empowers youth by fostering a deeper understanding of their heritage and culture, and ensures that the Italian language, traditions, holidays, feasts and family values stay alive.

Anthony Di Renzo, a fugitive from advertising, teaches writing and Italian American history at Ithaca College and has appeared in Alimentum, Il Caffé, Cottonwood Magazine, Essays & Fictions, Feile-Festa, The Normal School, River Styx, Syracuse Scholar, and Voices in Italian Americana. His most recent book Bitter Greens: Essays on Food, Politics, and Ethnicity from the Imperial Kitchen (State University of New York Press, 2010) was praised by Gastonomica: The Journal of Food and Culture. Trinàcria would become his first published novel. For more information about his work, visit: http://faculty.ithaca.edu/direnzo

Guernica Editions received its name in honor of Picacco’s famous painting immortalizing the Spanish city and the men, women, children, and animals destroyed under the weight of the fiery nationalist bombs.  As part of its mission, Guernica hopes that the books under its publication will make this world a better place to live and love.  Established in 1978, Guernica has published over 500 titles and authors from around the world. Guernica is grateful to the Canada Council of the Arts, the Ontario Arts Council, the Ontario Media Development Centre and the Government of Ontario. Without their support Canada’s cultures would remain silent and Guernica’s message go unheard.

Roberto Ragone has undertaken a variety of activities related to cultural education. Former executive director of the New York’s Lower East Side Business Improvement District, Roberto served as marketing director for the Ciao America Film Project and president and publicist for FIERI, an organization of college students and young professionals interested in celebrating and promoting Italian culture. His professional motto is “Transforming Vision to Value.” To learn more about Ragone and his background, review his LinkedIn profile at: http://www.linkedin.com/profile/edit?trk=hb_tab_pro_top\

The Editor
The Editor
Times of Sicily | Sicily in English

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